Apparently,some localswere upset that a polar bear that refused to be scared away from a Newfoundland community over the weekend was shot as it advanced on conservation officers and a crowd of onlookers who refused to disperse (see updated report hereon recent Newfoundland polar bear sightings, with annotated map).

Polar bears in late winter and spring have an immense drive to kill and eat as much as possible. Even bears that look well fed will continue to kill and eat. Enticing smells attract them onshore as they investigate any food possibility (see list below).

Seriously, you don’t want that food possibility to be you.

Polar bears can go from watching to charging, in the blink of an eye. You can’t outrun one. Killing quickly is what they do and they are immensely strong. Polar bears generally go for a killing bite to the head. Things to think about when a polar bear is prowling your community…Like big cats, polar bears are also stealth hunters and will use any object on the landscape to hide behind to make a surprise attack. On the ice, that would be hummocks of buckled ice or blocks of old ice caught in the pack. But on land, especially in communities occupied by people, there are hiding places everywhere: houses, cabins, sheds, garages, vehicles of all kinds, bridges, bushes, patches of trees, bus shelters.

Here is a list of the kinds of things that attract polar bears by smell (see previous posts here and here) but it’s not exhaustive:

This photograph was taken in the dead of winter (February 2013), with lots of sea ice offshore, by a remote camera maintained by Doug Clark (U. Saskatchewan) on the shore of Western Hudson Bay, which probably attracted the bear in the first place:

This half-finished cabin attracted a fat young female bear in eastern Hudson Bay in late February, also with lots of ice offshore:

Those upset about the bear that was shot in Catalina included Brandon Collins, a photographer who took many pictures on Saturday of the bear, which he shared with media outlets that morning, here and here, and below). He was most vocal in expressing his displeasure. In my opinion, that’s what can happen when people get emotionally attached to dangerous wild animals: they react emotionally when things go sour. Too often, wildlife photographers don’t maintain the bit of detachment they need.

Here is the statement issued by the local government minister, Neil King, which I support wholeheartedly (as did most other people):